从70岁到100岁:Kuakini夏威夷百岁老人研究。

Peter Martin,Leonard W Poon,Gina Lee,Hardeep K Obhi,Bradley J Willcox,Kamal H Masaki
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摘要

过去的研究强调了家庭寿命、支持、功能、健康和幸福因素在预测寿命方面的联系。在乔治亚适应模型的基础上,研究了生物心理社会预测因子集群对极端寿命和适应的影响,本研究旨在采用七个行为和社会预测因子集群对夏威夷日裔美国人的寿命进行预测。方法本研究纳入了来自Kuakini檀香山心脏项目的3734名男性(年龄77.82岁)。我们专注于三个研究问题。第一,谁能活到70多岁、80多岁、90多岁和100多岁?第二,发现了哪些行为和社会预测因素可以预测不同年龄的幸存者?第三,日裔美国男性的生存预测因素与现有文献中的发现是相同的还是不同的?结果我们的研究结果显示了四组不同的幸存者(70岁、80岁、90岁和100岁以上),并突出了组间的差异特征。此外,回归分析表明,认知、ADL功能、健康行为、糖尿病和父亲死亡年龄与寿命显著相关。最后,在日裔美国男性中发现的生存特征重复了文献中报道的许多发现。结果表明,在Kuakini檀香山研究中,当样本达到70岁、80岁、90岁或100岁时,幸存者存在个体差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
From 70 to 100: The Kuakini Hawaii Centenarian Study.
BACKGROUND Past research has highlighted the association of family longevity, support, functioning, and health and well-being factors in predicting longevity. Based on the Georgia Adaptation Model that examined the impact of clusters of bio-psycho-social predictors on extreme longevity and adaptation, the current study aimed to employ seven clusters of behavioral and social predictors on longevity of Japanese-American men from Hawaii. METHODS A sample of 3,734 men (Mage = 77.82 years) from the Kuakini Honolulu Heart Program was included in this research. We focused on three research questions. One, WHO survived to their 70s, 80s, 90s, and 100s? Two, WHAT behavioral and social predictors were found to predict survivors of the different ages? Three, are the survival predictors the same or different for the Japanese-American men compared to extant findings in the literature? RESULTS Our results demonstrated four distinct groups of survivors (70s, 80s, 90s, and 100+) and highlighted differentiating characteristics among groups. Moreover, regression analyses suggested that cognition, ADL functioning, health behaviors, diabetes, and father's age at death were significantly associated with longevity. Finally, survival characteristics found among the Japanese-American men replicated many findings reported in the literature. CONCLUSIONS The results indicate that there are individual differences for survivors in the Kuakini Honolulu Study, as this sample reaches 70, 80, 90, or 100 years of life.
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